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Baha’is share pain of a persecuted past

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(MCT) — CHICAGO — One skinny scar lies just to the side of Minoo Panahi’s left eye from when a Muslim classmate threw a rock at her. Several round spots mark her face — the result of a nervous scratching habit developed after years of stress. An emotional ache lingers decades after her father was murdered, shot in the head when he opened the front door.

The River North resident is one of an estimated hundreds of Chicago Baha’is who share the pain of a persecuted past.

An estimated 12,000 Baha’is have fled Iran for the United States since 1980, making up about 7 percent of 170,000 Baha’is in the country. About 3,000 Baha’is live in the Chicago area, divided into hundreds of microcommunities and holding worship services in their homes.

With language and cultural barriers, the adjustment to Western society can be difficult, Panahi and her sisters said. What’s more difficult is the healing process.

But here in the Chicago area, in a vista so different from their homeland, Baha’i immigrants say they find support, religious freedom and peace in the prayerful folds of their Midwestern communities.

In a spacious house in Northbrook, Manijeh Bayzaee welcomed more than 20 guests into her home on a recent Friday night for a Baha’i devotional service and a modest meal. They read scriptures and played music. The Panahi sisters sat on a decorative couch with their petite 70-year-old mother, Nasrin, who has Alzheimer’s.

“We always question, why has this family been tested so much?” said Bayzaee, who is Nasrin’s cousin. “And we think that there is a purpose.”

When new Baha’is arrive in the area, they are immediately welcomed, Baha’is said. An email from the community goes out and, days later, a Baha’i will welcome the family with a U-Haul of furniture, clothes or even a place to stay.

Established families will make home visits and check in by phone, especially with those who have suffered harsh religious persecution in Iran. They also host prayer meetings.

Prayer is central to the community’s support — a familiar comfort to those who have moved thousands of miles from their torn homeland.

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